[HTML][HTML] Vivax malaria: neglected and not benign

RN Price, E Tjitra, CA Guerra, S Yeung… - The American journal …, 2007 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
RN Price, E Tjitra, CA Guerra, S Yeung, NJ White, NM Anstey
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene, 2007ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Plasmodium vivax threatens almost 40% of the world's population, resulting in 132-391
million clinical infections each year. Most of these cases originate from South East Asia and
the Western Pacific, although a significant number also occur in Africa and South America.
Although often regarded as causing a benign and self-limiting infection, there is increasing
evidence that the overall burden, economic impact and severity of disease from P. vivax
have been underestimated. Malaria control strategies have had limited success and are …
Abstract
Plasmodium vivax threatens almost 40% of the world’s population, resulting in 132-391 million clinical infections each year. Most of these cases originate from South East Asia and the Western Pacific, although a significant number also occur in Africa and South America. Although often regarded as causing a benign and self-limiting infection, there is increasing evidence that the overall burden, economic impact and severity of disease from P. vivax have been underestimated. Malaria control strategies have had limited success and are confounded by the lack of access to reliable diagnosis, emergence of multidrug resistant isolates and the parasite’s ability to transmit early in the course of disease and relapse from dormant liver stages at varying time intervals after the initial infection. Progress in reducing the burden of disease will require improved access to reliable diagnosis and effective treatment of both blood-stage and latent parasites, and more detailed characterization of the epidemiology, morbidity and economic impact of vivax malaria. Without these, vivax malaria will continue to be neglected by ministries of health, policy makers, researchers and funding bodies.
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